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Technology Stocks : Oracle Corporation (ORCL) -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: alfred felsberger who wrote (6734)4/3/1998 11:37:00 PM
From: vish ramamurthy  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 19080
 
By Michael Kanellos and Mike Ricciuti
Hi,

This is from news.com

Staff Writers, CNET NEWS.COM
April 3, 1998, 6:30 p.m. PT

update Sun Microsystems (SUNW) and Oracle
(ORCL) saw their stock prices fall today because
of growing concern about the commercial prospect
for network computers.

Sun's shares declined about 3 percent to close at
41-1/8, while Oracle's stock dropped more than
6.5 percent to finish the day at 28-1/8. Wall Street
traders attributed the slide to concern over current
and prospective sales for NCs.

"If there is still one person out there who thinks the
NC is viable, they just got back from six months in
Guam," said Jeff Matthews, a general partner in
Ram Partners, a Greenwich, Connecticut-based
investment partnership. "It was a top-down thing,
and top-down things don't work."

Simply put, sales of network computers--in
particular, NCs based around the Java
programming language--aren't great. Only 144,000
NCs were sold last year, about half of projections,
according to a report from Dataquest earlier this
week. Federal Express, one of the early adopters
of Java-based NCs in 1996, recently decided
instead to use PCs and Windows-based terminals.

The primary drag of sales continues to be a dearth
of NC software, analysts say. Unlike PCs, network
computers store their data and applications on a
central server, which is also used to manage the
desktop.

Centralization is supposed to lower operations
cost. Unfortunately for NC promoters, however,
few corporate applications based around Java for
the NC exist. NC productivity applications for
clients are also still in their early stages.

NC hardware has also been a problem, as few
companies have signed up to manufacture them.
Sun itself only released its JavaStation for
commercial release last week. Earlier this week,
Sun and IBM announced that they would
collaborate on developing and marketing a
common Java-based operating system for NCs.

Called JavaOS for Business, the new OS makes
NCs more attractive to buyers because it will
effectively set compatibility standards for NCs from
different manufacturers. JavaOS for Business,
however, won't be out until midyear and likely
won't be fully implemented on IBM or Sun NCs
until early 1999.

Sales of "thin-client" NCs are expected to climb to
482,000 this year, but Dataquest points out that
many of these will not be network computers at all.
Many of so-called thin-client devices could be
Windows-based terminals or stripped-down PCs
that are centrally managed through existing
Windows technology.

Allstate Insurance became the largest purchaser of
NCs ever this year. The company, however, is not
using its IBM NC network to run Java applications.
Instead, the Allstate system runs Unix programs
and Windows NT, according to an IBM
spokesman. NC woes may not be entirely to blame for Oracle's
stock slide. Yesterday, Oracle president and COO
Ray Lane told a meeting of Wall Street analysts
that the company continues to see IS spending
diverted away from new database and tools
software spending and directed toward fixing Year
2000-related problems, according to a report
issued today by Furman Selz.

Lane also said a continuing reorganization of
Oracle's sales force has hindered the company's
ability to gather new database sales to offset Year
2000 problems. The company expects to have a
streamlined sales organization in place by the end of
this month.

And Oracle CFO Jeff Henley added that, although
database sales improved last quarter, some of the
deals may have been pulled in from the current
quarter.

Its stock may also be taking a hit because of
comments by Oracle at the company's analyst
meeting that a sales force reorganization this quarter could disrupt revenues.

ganesh



To: alfred felsberger who wrote (6734)4/4/1998 3:00:00 AM
From: Martin Alan Rosenblith  Respond to of 19080
 
Alfred,

Go to Oracle's home page ... corporate information .... investor relations ..... presentations .... to see Larry's, Ray's and Jeff's slide presentations at the April 2nd analysts meeting.

regards,

Martin